Supporters of the French far-right commentator Eric Zemmour, leader of far-right party "Reconquete!" and candidate for the 2022 French presidential election, react to the election results in the first round of the 2022 French presidential election, in Par
Supporters of the French far-right commentator Eric Zemmour, leader of far-right party "Reconquete!" and candidate for the 2022 French presidential election, react to the election results in the first round of the 2022 French presidential election, in Paris, France April 10, 2022. Reuters / YVES HERMAN

Centrist President Emmanuel Macron headed on Monday to a blue-collar stronghold of his far-right rival Marine Le Pen, saying her economic promises were a fantasy, in a bid to convince sceptical voters there and beyond to give him a second mandate.

Macron is slightly ahead in polls for the presidential election's runoff on April 24, but he faces a tough challenge from Le Pen, who has tapped into anger over the cost of living and a perception he is disconnected from everyday hardships.

"I'm trying to make clear my programme is fair and socially-minded," Macron said on a walkabout in Denain, one of the country's poorest towns in its former industrial heartland.

In hours of sometimes heated exchanges, locals called him out on everything from his plans to push back the retirement age to the fact that he said at the height of the Omicron phase of the COVID-19 pandemic that he wanted to "piss off" anti-vaxxers.

"I said that lovingly," he told a bewildered local about the much-commented "piss-off" comment.

"It's all fake ... He's coming to talk to us now because he's scared of losing to Marine Le Pen," 36-year-old Stephanie Berta, an unemployed mother of six, told Reuters outside the town hall of Denain.

Berta voted Le Pen in the election's first round and will do the same on the 24th. "Of course she can't fix everything, but maybe a woman in power will be able to do something," she said.

But beyond Denain, where Le Pen on Sunday won 42% of votes in the town and the hard-left's Jean-Luc Melenchon came second, Macron was telling voters across France he had heard their concerns and wanted to create wealth so more could be redistributed.

He said Le Pen, who has successfully focused her campaign on the cost-of-living issues troubling millions, would not be able to finance her populist economic agenda and that she was lying to voters.

In turn, he said he was ready to adapt his platform and improve it, in particular to better protect the environment.

OPEN-ENDED RUNOFF

A Le Pen win would send shockwaves across Europe and beyond, and deliver a similar jolt to the establishment as Britain's Brexit vote to leave the European Union or Donald Trump's 2017 entry into the White House.

Interior ministry results showed that, on Sunday, Macron won 27.84% of votes, while Le Pen secured 23.15% and hard-left veteran Jean-Luc Melenchon 21.95%.

Investors appeared somewhat relieved, and France's CAC 40 outperformed other European peers.

Melenchon urged his supporters not to give Le Pen a single vote but did not endorse Macron. How left-wing voters cast their ballots in the runoff will be crucial to determining the winner.

European neighbours are closely watching events in France, which together with Germany has driven Europe's post-war integration.

The possibility of a Le Pen win was a worrying prospect for the EU and needed to be prevented by the French people, Luxembourg's Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn said.

"It would not only be a break away from the core values of the EU, it would totally change its course," he said.

FRACTURED FRANCE

Making her third run for president, Le Pen on Sunday said voters faced a choice between two opposite visions of France: "one of division, injustice and disorder imposed by Emmanuel Macron for the benefit of a few, the other a rallying together of French people around social justice and protection."

Le Pen, who has left the core of her far-right, anti-immigration programme unchanged, has focused her campaign on social policies including cutting the retirement age to 60 for those who start work before 20, scrap income tax for the under-30s and reduce VAT on energy to 5.5% from 20%. She says her numbers add up.

Sunday's first round dealt yet another hammer blow to the traditional parties of the centre-left and centre-right, which governed France for decades.

The Socialist Party's Anne Hidalgo picked up just 1.8% of votes. The conservatives' Valerie Pecresse, seen earlier in the campaign as a serious threat to Macron won just 4.8% of the vote, below the threshold needed to be reimbursed for her campaign costs by the state.

Pecresse appealed at an emergency meeting for urgent donations to save her Les Republicains party. "What is at the stake is the very survival of Les Republicains and beyond, the very survival of the Right," she said. [L2N2W90OV]